The preposition “on” in philosophy

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When listening to philosophical debate, the preposition “on” is frequently used referring to a principal of some sort. I’ve never heard this preposition used this way in any other parlance or vernacular. What does “on” mean in the field of philosophy and why do they use it?

Examples:

“Moral absolutes cannot exist *on atheism.*”

“*On Dr. Craig’s view*, their actions are justified.”

“*On solution number 3*, hard solipsism is irrelevant.”

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Many Roman philisophers titled their works in Latin starting with the prefix “de”, which was translated to “on” when though it means “about”.

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